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1.
NRXN1 microdeletions occur at a relatively high frequency and confer increased risk for neurodevelopmental and neurobehavioral abnormalities. The mechanism that makes NRXN1 a deletion hotspot is unknown. Here, we identified deletions of the NRXN1 region in affected cohorts, confirming a strong association with the autism spectrum and other neurodevelopmental disorders. Interestingly, deletions in both affected and control individuals were clustered in the 5′ portion of NRXN1 and its immediate upstream region. To explore the mechanism of deletion, we mapped and analyzed the breakpoints of 32 deletions. At the deletion breakpoints, frequent microhomology (68.8%, 2–19 bp) suggested predominant mechanisms of DNA replication error and/or microhomology-mediated end-joining. Long terminal repeat (LTR) elements, unique non-B-DNA structures, and MEME-defined sequence motifs were significantly enriched, but Alu and LINE sequences were not. Importantly, small-size inverted repeats (minus self chains, minus sequence motifs, and partial complementary sequences) were significantly overrepresented in the vicinity of NRXN1 region deletion breakpoints, suggesting that, although they are not interrupted by the deletion process, such inverted repeats can predispose a region to genomic instability by mediating single-strand DNA looping via the annealing of partially reverse complementary strands and the promoting of DNA replication fork stalling and DNA replication error. Our observations highlight the potential importance of inverted repeats of variable sizes in generating a rearrangement hotspot in which individual breakpoints are not recurrent. Mechanisms that involve short inverted repeats in initiating deletion may also apply to other deletion hotspots in the human genome.  相似文献   

2.
Repetitive DNA sequences with the potential to form alternative DNA conformations, such as slipped structures and cruciforms, can induce genetic instability by promoting replication errors and by serving as a substrate for DNA repair proteins, which may lead to DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). However, the contribution of each of the DSB repair pathways, homologous recombination (HR), non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) and single-strand annealing (SSA), to this sort of genetic instability is not fully understood. Herein, we assessed the genome-wide distribution of repetitive DNA sequences in the Mycobacterium smegmatis, Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Escherichia coli genomes, and determined the types and frequencies of genetic instability induced by direct and inverted repeats, both in the presence and in the absence of HR, NHEJ, and SSA. All three genomes are strongly enriched in direct repeats and modestly enriched in inverted repeats. When using chromosomally integrated constructs in M. smegmatis, direct repeats induced the perfect deletion of their intervening sequences ∼1,000-fold above background. Absence of HR further enhanced these perfect deletions, whereas absence of NHEJ or SSA had no influence, suggesting compromised replication fidelity. In contrast, inverted repeats induced perfect deletions only in the absence of SSA. Both direct and inverted repeats stimulated excision of the constructs from the attB integration sites independently of HR, NHEJ, or SSA. With episomal constructs, direct and inverted repeats triggered DNA instability by activating nucleolytic activity, and absence of the DSB repair pathways (in the order NHEJ>HR>SSA) exacerbated this instability. Thus, direct and inverted repeats may elicit genetic instability in mycobacteria by 1) directly interfering with replication fidelity, 2) stimulating the three main DSB repair pathways, and 3) enticing L5 site-specific recombination.  相似文献   

3.
Inverted repeats (IRs) can facilitate structural variation as crucibles of genomic rearrangement. Complex duplication—inverted triplication—duplication (DUP-TRP/INV-DUP) rearrangements that contain breakpoint junctions within IRs have been recently associated with both MECP2 duplication syndrome (MIM#300260) and Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease (PMD, MIM#312080). We investigated 17 unrelated PMD subjects with copy number gains at the PLP1 locus including triplication and quadruplication of specific genomic intervals—16/17 were found to have a DUP-TRP/INV-DUP rearrangement product. An IR distal to PLP1 facilitates DUP-TRP/INV-DUP formation as well as an inversion structural variation found frequently amongst normal individuals. We show that a homology—or homeology—driven replicative mechanism of DNA repair can apparently mediate template switches within stretches of microhomology. Moreover, we provide evidence that quadruplication and potentially higher order amplification of a genomic interval can occur in a manner consistent with rolling circle amplification as predicted by the microhomology-mediated break induced replication (MMBIR) model.  相似文献   

4.
A survey of bacterial insertion sequences using IScan   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Bacterial insertion sequences (ISs) are the simplest kinds of bacterial mobile DNA. Evolutionary studies need consistent IS annotation across many different genomes. We have developed an open-source software package, IScan, to identify bacterial ISs and their sequence elements—inverted and target direct repeats—in multiple genomes using multiple flexible search parameters. We applied IScan to 438 completely sequenced bacterial genomes and 20 IS families. The resulting data show that ISs within a genome are extremely similar, with a mean synonymous divergence of Ks = 0.033. Our analysis substantially extends previously available information, and suggests that most ISs have entered bacterial genomes recently. By implication, their population persistence may depend on horizontal transfer. We also used IScan's ability to analyze the statistical significance of sequence similarity among many IS inverted repeats. Although the inverted repeats of insertion sequences are evolutionarily highly flexible parts of ISs, we show that this ability can be used to enrich a dataset for ISs that are likely to be functional. Applied to the thousands of genomes that will soon be available, IScan could be used for many purposes, such as mapping the evolutionary history and horizontal transfer patterns of different ISs.  相似文献   

5.
The purified dimeric form of the Rep protein, a replication initiator protein of the plasmid pSC101, has a low affinity for repeated sequences, iterons, in the replication origin of the plasmid, and higher affinities for two inverted repeats in the operator region of the rep gene resulting in its functioning as an autorepressor. Studies of binding to various synthetic DNA have established that Rep can bind to duplex iteron-sequence carrying open (non-complementary) strands at one end proximal to the rep gene. Open strands at the opposite end of the iteron have no effect on Rep-binding. One open strand seems to be required in a sequence-specific fashion. A randomly sequenced duplex DNA with the open strands cannot bind to Rep but can function as a significant competitor. This suggests that Rep has some affinity for the open strands and forms a stable complex with the adjacent iteron. The mutated Rep protein, Rep1, which causes an increase in the plasmid copy number in vivo, has equally high affinity for the iteron with the open strands as wild type Rep, though it has a lower affinity for the inverted repeats than the wild type. The Rep dimer might bind to these DNA sequences with different modes.  相似文献   

6.
We have analyzed the sequence organization of the central spacer region of the extrachromosomal ribosomal DNA from two strains of the acellular slime mold Physarum polycephalum. It had been inferred previously from electron microscopy that this region, which comprises about one third of the 60 kb3 palindromic rDNA, contains a complex series of inverted repetitious sequences. By partial digestion of end-labeled fragments isolated from purified rDNA and from rDNA fragments cloned in Escherichia coli, we have constructed a detailed restriction map of this region. The 11 kb of spacer DNA of each half molecule of rDNA contains the following elements: (a) two separate regions, one of 1.1 kb and one of 2.1 kb, composed of many direct repeats of the same 30 base-pair unit; (b) a region of 4.4 kb composed of a complex series of inverted repeats of a 310 base-pair unit; (c) another region of 1.6 kb composed of inverted repeats of the same 310 base-pair unit located directly adjacent to the center of the rDNA; (d) two copies of a unique sequence of 0.85 kb, which probably contains a replication origin. Some of the CpG sequences in the spacer resist cleavage by certain restriction endonucleases and thus appear to be methylated. The lack of perfect symmetry about the central axis and the arrangement of inverted repeated sequences explain the complex pattern of branches and forks of the fold-back molecules previously observed by electron microscopy. Comparison of the rDNA restriction maps from the two strains of Physarum suggests that the repeat units in the spacer are undergoing concerted evolution. We propose a model to explain the evolutionary origin of the several palindromic axes in the Physarum rDNA spacer.  相似文献   

7.
A new member of the 2-μm family of plasmids, named pTD1, was found in the yeastTorulaspora delbrueckii,a widespread yeast associated with food. Nucleotide sequences revealed the presence of a pair of inverted repeats and three open reading frames, one of which is a homologue of the FLP recombinase gene of 2-μm plasmid. An ARS region was identified, by replication inSaccharomyces cerevisiaeandT. delbrueckii,near one of the inverted repeats. By the use of pTD1 derivatives and auxotrophic mutant hosts, an efficient host–vector system was established forT. delbrueckii.So far, the 2-μm family of plasmids is restricted to four closely related genera (Q6 group):Saccharomyces, Zygosaccharomyces, Kluyveromyces,andTorulaspora.After a survey of 2500 strains belonging to about 500 species (80 genera) of yeast, no circular plasmids were found in other genera.  相似文献   

8.
Many archaea and bacteria have an adaptive immune system known as CRISPR which allows them to recognize and destroy foreign nucleic acid that they have previously encountered. Two CRISPR-associated proteins, Cas1 and Cas2, are required for the acquisition step of adaptation, in which fragments of foreign DNA are incorporated into the host CRISPR locus. Cas1 genes have also been found scattered in several archaeal and bacterial genomes, unassociated with CRISPR loci or other cas proteins. Rather, they are flanked by nearly identical inverted repeats and enclosed within direct repeats, suggesting that these genetic regions might be mobile elements (‘casposons’). To investigate this possibility, we have characterized the in vitro activities of the putative Cas1 transposase (‘casposase’) from Aciduliprofundum boonei. The purified Cas1 casposase can integrate both short oligonucleotides with inverted repeat sequences and a 2.8 kb excised mini-casposon into target DNA. Casposon integration occurs without target specificity and generates 14–15 basepair target site duplications, consistent with those found in casposon host genomes. Thus, Cas1 casposases carry out similar biochemical reactions as the CRISPR Cas1-Cas2 complex but with opposite substrate specificities: casposases integrate specific sequences into random target sites, whereas CRISPR Cas1-Cas2 integrates essentially random sequences into a specific site in the CRISPR locus.  相似文献   

9.
Centromeres are composed of long arrays of satellite repeats in most multicellular eukaryotes investigated to date. The satellite repeat–based centromeres are believed to have evolved from “neocentromeres” that originally contained only single- or low-copy sequences. However, the emergence and evolution of the satellite repeats in centromeres has been elusive. Potato (Solanum tuberosum) provides a model system for studying centromere evolution because each of its 12 centromeres contains distinct DNA sequences, allowing comparative analysis of homoeologous centromeres from related species. We conducted genome-wide analysis of the centromeric sequences in Solanum verrucosum, a wild species closely related to potato. Unambiguous homoeologous centromeric sequences were detected in only a single centromere (Cen9) between the two species. Four centromeres (Cen2, Cen4, Cen7, and Cen10) in S. verrucosum contained distinct satellite repeats that were amplified from retrotransposon-related sequences. Strikingly, the same four centromeres in potato contain either different satellite repeats (Cen2 and Cen7) or exclusively single- and low-copy sequences (Cen4 and Cen10). Our sequence comparison of five homoeologous centromeres in two Solanum species reveals rapid divergence of centromeric sequences among closely related species. We propose that centromeric satellite repeats undergo boom-bust cycles before a favorable repeat is fixed in the population.  相似文献   

10.
The genome of Drosophila bifasciata harbours two distinct subfamilies of P-homologous sequences, designated M-type and O-type elements based on similarities to P element sequences from other species. Both subfamilies have some general features in common: they are of similar length (M-type: 2935 bp, O-type: 2986 bp), are flanked by direct repeats of 8 by (the presumptive target sequence), contain terminal inverted repeats, and have a coding region consisting of four exons. The splice sites are at homologous positions and the exons have the coding capacity for proteins of 753 amino acids (M-type) and 757 amino acids (O-type). It seems likely that both types of element represent functional transposons. The nucleotide divergence of the two P element subfamilies is high (31%). The main structural difference is observed in the terminal inverted repeats. Whereas the termini of M-type elements consist of 31 by inverted repeats, the inverted repeats of the O-type elements are interrupted by non-complementary stretches of DNA, 12 by at the 5′ end and 14 by at the 3′ end. This peculiarity is shared by all members of the O-type subfamily. Comparison with other P element sequences indicates incongruities between the phylogenies of the species and the P transposons. M-type and O-type elements apparently have no common origin in the D. bifasciata lineage. The M-type sequence seems to be most closely related to the P element from Scaptomyza pallida and thus could be considered as a more recent invader of the D. bifasciata gene pool. The origin of the O-type elements cannot be unequivocally deduced from the present data. The sequence comparison also provides new insights into conserved domains with possible implications for the function of P transposons.  相似文献   

11.
Copy number variations (CNVs) contribute to the adaptation process in two possible ways. First, they may have a direct role, in which a certain number of copies often provide a selective advantage. Second, CNVs can also indirectly contribute to adaptation because a higher copy number increases the so-called “mutational target size.” In this study, we show that the copy number amplification of FLO11D in the osmotolerant yeast Zygosaccharomyces rouxii promotes its further adaptation to a flor-formative environment, such as osmostress static culture conditions. We demonstrate that a gene, which was identified as FLO11D, is responsible for flor formation and that its expression is induced by osmostress under glucose-free conditions, which confer unique characteristics to Z. rouxii, such as osmostress-dependent flor formation. This organism possesses zero to three copies of FLO11D, and it appears likely that the FLO11D copy number increased in a branch of the Z. rouxii tree. The cellular hydrophobicity correlates with the FLO11D copy number, and the strain with a higher copy number of FLO11D exhibits a fitness advantage compared to a reference strain under osmostress static culture conditions. Our data indicate that the FLO gene-related system in Z. rouxii has evolved remarkably to adapt to osmostress environments.  相似文献   

12.
Genomic disorders are often caused by recurrent copy number variations (CNVs), with nonallelic homologous recombination (NAHR) as the underlying mechanism. Recently, several microhomology-mediated repair mechanisms—such as microhomology-mediated end-joining (MMEJ), fork stalling and template switching (FoSTeS), microhomology-mediated break-induced replication (MMBIR), serial replication slippage (SRS), and break-induced SRS (BISRS)—were described in the etiology of non-recurrent CNVs in human disease. In addition, their formation may be stimulated by genomic architectural features. It is, however, largely unexplored to what extent these mechanisms contribute to rare, locus-specific pathogenic CNVs. Here, fine-mapping of 42 microdeletions of the FOXL2 locus, encompassing FOXL2 (32) or its regulatory domain (10), serves as a model for rare, locus-specific CNVs implicated in genetic disease. These deletions lead to blepharophimosis syndrome (BPES), a developmental condition affecting the eyelids and the ovary. For breakpoint mapping we used targeted array-based comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH), quantitative PCR (qPCR), long-range PCR, and Sanger sequencing of the junction products. Microhomology, ranging from 1 bp to 66 bp, was found in 91.7% of 24 characterized breakpoint junctions, being significantly enriched in comparison with a random control sample. Our results show that microhomology-mediated repair mechanisms underlie at least 50% of these microdeletions. Moreover, genomic architectural features, like sequence motifs, non-B DNA conformations, and repetitive elements, were found in all breakpoint regions. In conclusion, the majority of these microdeletions result from microhomology-mediated mechanisms like MMEJ, FoSTeS, MMBIR, SRS, or BISRS. Moreover, we hypothesize that the genomic architecture might drive their formation by increasing the susceptibility for DNA breakage or promote replication fork stalling. Finally, our locus-centered study, elucidating the etiology of a large set of rare microdeletions involved in a monogenic disorder, can serve as a model for other clustered, non-recurrent microdeletions in genetic disease.  相似文献   

13.
14.
15.
CRISPR systems build adaptive immunity against mobile genetic elements by DNA capture and integration catalysed by Cas1–Cas2 protein complexes. Recent studies suggested that CRISPR repeats and adaptation module originated from a novel type of DNA transposons called casposons. Casposons encode a Cas1 homologue called casposase that alone integrates into target molecules single and double-stranded DNA containing terminal inverted repeats (TIRs) from casposons. A recent study showed Methanosarcina mazei casposase is able to integrate random DNA oligonucleotides, followed up in this work using Acidoprofundum boonei casposase, from which we also observe promiscuous substrate integration. Here we first show that the substrate flexibility of Acidoprofundum boonei casposase extends to random integration of DNA without TIRs, including integration of a functional gene. We then used this to investigate targeting of the casposase-catalysed DNA integration reactions to specific DNA sites that would allow insertion of defined DNA payloads. Casposase–Cas9 fusions were engineered that were catalytically proficient in vitro and generated RNA-guided DNA integration products from short synthetic DNA or a gene, with or without TIRs. However, DNA integration could still occur unguided due to the competing background activity of the casposase moiety. Expression of Casposase-dCas9 in Escherichia coli cells effectively targeted chromosomal and plasmid lacZ revealed by reduced β-galactosidase activity but DNA integration was not detected. The promiscuous substrate integration properties of casposases make them potential DNA insertion tools. The Casposase–dCas9 fusion protein may serves as a prototype for development in genetic editing for DNA insertion that is independent of homology-directed DNA repair.  相似文献   

16.
Many microorganisms exhibit high levels of intragenic recombination following horizontal gene transfer events. Furthermore, many microbial genes are subject to strong diversifying selection as part of the pathogenic process. A multiple sequence alignment is an essential starting point for many of the tools that provide fundamental insights on gene structure and evolution, such as phylogenetics; however, an accurate alignment is not always possible to attain. In this study, a new analytic approach was developed in order to better quantify the genetic organization of highly diversified genes whose alleles do not align. This BLAST-based method, denoted BLAST Miner, employs an iterative process that places short segments of highly similar sequence into discrete datasets that are designated “modules.” The relative positions of modules along the length of the genes, and their frequency of occurrence, are used to identify sequence duplications, insertions, and rearrangements. Partial alleles of sof from Streptococcus pyogenes, encoding a surface protein under host immune selection, were analyzed for module content. High-frequency Modules 6 and 13 were identified and examined in depth. Nucleotide sequences corresponding to both modules contain numerous duplications and inverted repeats, whereby many codons form palindromic pairs. Combined with evidence for a strong codon usage bias, data suggest that Module 6 and 13 sequences are under selection to preserve their nucleic acid secondary structure. The concentration of overlapping tandem and inverted repeats within a small region of DNA is highly suggestive of a mechanistic role for Module 6 and 13 sequences in promoting aberrant recombination. Analysis of pbp2X alleles from Streptococcus pneumoniae, encoding cell wall enzymes that confer antibiotic resistance, supports the broad applicability of this tool in deciphering the genetic organization of highly recombined genes. BLAST Miner shares with phylogenetics the important predictive quality that leads to the generation of testable hypotheses based on sequence data.  相似文献   

17.
William R. Rice 《Genetics》2014,196(2):367-371
Experimental genetics with model organisms and mathematically explicit genetic theory are generally considered to be the major paradigms by which progress in genetics is achieved. Here I argue that this view is incomplete and that pivotal advances in genetics—and other fields of biology—are also made by synthesizing disparate threads of extant information rather than generating new information from experiments or formal theory. Because of the explosive expansion of information in numerous “-omics” data banks, and the fragmentation of genetics into numerous subdisciplines, the importance of the synthesis paradigm will likely expand with time.MAJOR advances in the field of genetics have been developed on a foundation supported by three major pillars (i.e., paradigms, by which I mean a framework of basic assumptions, logical approaches, and methodologies), two of which are widely known and appreciated while the third is rarely even acknowledged. The first major paradigm is experimental genetics, especially in the context of model organisms. The work of Thomas H. Morgan and his colleagues at Cal Tech during the early 20th century is a classic example of this approach. A succession of elegant experimental studies by this research team led to the development of the Drosophila melanogaster model system, which Morgan et al. (1915) used to construct the first genomic map that included genes assigned to precise locations on all of an organism’s chromosomes. Their accumulated experimental results also contributed importantly to their book, The Mechanism of Mendelian Heredity (1915), which many consider to be the catalyst that launched the modern era of genetics.The second paradigm is mathematically explicit genetic theory. The succession of genetical theory papers published throughout the first half of the 20th century by Ronald A. Fisher is a classic example of this approach. Fisher’s work reconciled a fundamental rift in the early history of modern genetics—i.e., the genetic approaches of the Mendelians (advocated by William Bateson and Hugo de Vries) vs. the Galtonians (also known as the biometricians, represented in particular by Karl Pearson and Walter F. Weldon)—by showing that Mendelian particulate inheritance could be unified with the quantitative genetics used to analyze continuously varying traits such as height and weight (Fisher 1918). Although Darwin developed the basic framework of evolution, it was Fisher—and contemporary theoreticians Sewall Wright and J. B. S. Haldane—who integrated this qualitative idea into a quantitatively explicit genetic theory that led to the modern synthesis of evolution and launched the field of evolutionary genetics (also known as population genetics and summarized in Fisher’s now classic book, The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection, first published in 1930). Of course, some theory in genetics is not mathematically explicit, such as the “chromosomal theory of inheritance” or the “central dogma.” But this form of theory usually represents the culmination of studies using the experimental genetics paradigm rather than a unique approach to genetics.Most major advances in genetics have been achieved via one, the other, or a combination of these experimental and theoretical paradigms. But there is a well-known exception: Watson and Crick’s discovery of the structure of DNA (Watson and Crick 1953a,b, ∼11,000 combined citations—throughout, numbers of citations are taken from Google Scholar—, and arguably the pivotal publications that launched the modern field of molecular genetics). Watson and Crick used no mathematical genetic theory, nor did they do any critical experiments; instead, they integrated many threads of established information (some unpublished) to deduce the chemical structure of the hereditary material, i.e., the DNA double helix and how this structure could explain gene replication. Although later experiments, such as those of Meselson and Stahl (1958) on DNA replication, would ultimately confirm the deduced structure and replication of DNA that was proposed by Watson and Crick, the pivotal publications of these researchers used neither the experimental nor the theory paradigms of genetics. Their approach exemplifies what I will call the “synthesis paradigm.” Watson and Crick’s work demonstrates that there is actually a trichotomy of approaches—the experimental, theoretical-mathematical, and theoretical-synthetic approaches—that combine like interwoven, reinforcing strands in a cord of historical advances in genetics.In the next few sections I describe other instances in which the synthesis paradigm has been of critical importance in the field of genetics. This set of examples is meant to be illustrative and by no means exhaustive. Next I illustrate how the synthesis paradigm has been of critical importance in other fields of biology. Finally, I describe how a fuller appreciation of the synthesis paradigm can influence the training of the next cohort of geneticists and the career trajectory of current geneticists.  相似文献   

18.
Two sets of iso-1-cytochrome c variants have been prepared with N-terminal insertions of pure polyglutamine, i.e., PolyQ variants, or polyglutamine interrupted with lysine every sixth residue, i.e., Gln-rich variants. The polymer properties of these pure polyGln or Gln-rich sequences have been evaluated using equilibrium and kinetic His-heme loop formation methods for loop sizes ranging from 22 to 46 in 1.5, 3.0, and 6.0 M guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl). In 6.0 M GdnHCl, the scaling exponent, ν3, for the pure polyGln sequences, is ∼1.7—significantly less than ν3 ≈ 2.15 for the Gln-rich sequences. The stability of the His-heme loops becomes progressively greater for the pure polyGln sequences relative to the Gln-rich sequences as GdnHCl concentration decreases from 6.0 to 1.5 M. Thus, the context of the sequence effects the polymer properties of Gln repeats even in denaturing concentrations of GdnHCl. Comparison of data for the Gln-rich variants with previous results for Gly-rich and Ala-rich variants shows that ν3 ∼ 2.2 for the Gln-rich, Gly-rich, and Ala-rich sequences in 6.0 M GdnHCl, whereas ν3 remains unchanged at 3.0 M GdnHCl concentration for the Gln-rich and Ala-rich sequences but decreases to ∼1.7 for the Gly-rich sequences. Thus, the polymer properties of Gln-rich and Ala-rich sequences are less sensitive to solvent quality in denaturing solutions of GdnHCl than Gly-rich sequences. Evaluation of Flory’s characteristic ratio, Cn, for the Gln-rich and Ala-rich sequences relative to the Gly-rich sequences shows that Gln-rich sequences are stiffer than Ala-rich sequences at both 3.0 and 6.0 M GdnHCl.  相似文献   

19.
Amplified genes in cancer cells reside on extrachromosomal double minutes (DMs) or chromosomal homogeneously staining regions (HSRs). We used a plasmid bearing a mammalian replication initiation region to model gene amplification. Recombination junctions in the amplified region were comprehensively identified and sequenced. The junctions consisted of truncated direct repeats (type 1) or inverted repeats (type 2) with or without spacing. All of these junctions were frequently detected in HSRs, whereas there were few type 1 or a unique type 2 flanked by a short inverted repeat in DMs. The junction sequences suggested a model in which the inverted repeats were generated by sister chromatid fusion. We were consistently able to detect anaphase chromatin bridges connected by the plasmid repeat, which were severed in the middle during mitosis. De novo HSR generation was observed in live cells, and each HSR was lengthened more rapidly than expected from the classical breakage/fusion/bridge model. Importantly, we found massive DNA synthesis at the broken anaphase bridge during the G1 to S phase, which could explain the rapid lengthening of the HSR. This mechanism may not operate in acentric DMs, where most of the junctions are eliminated and only those junctions produced through stable intermediates remain.  相似文献   

20.
《Gene》1998,207(1):93-96
Two novel insertion sequences, ISRm4-1 and ISRm9 have been identified in Sinorhizobium meliloti. ISRm4-1 is 936-bp in length, flanked by 17-bp putative terminal inverted repeats and a putative target duplication of 3-bp. ISRm4-1 is a member of the IS5 family of insertion sequences, closely related to ISRm4. ISRm9 is 2797-bp in length and carries 25-bp inverted repeats with target duplication of 7-bp. ISRm9 belongs to the IS21 family of insertion elements. On the non-pSym plasmid pRmeGR4b from S. meliloti strain GR4, a copy of ISRm4-1 is interrupted at nucleotide 150 from its 5′-end by a copy of ISRm9. Whereas ISRm4-like elements are widespread in S. meliloti, the distribution of ISRm9 appears to be correlated to that of pRmeGR4b-type plasmids.  相似文献   

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